| Literature DB >> 34288651 |
Majid Mohseni1, Letícia Recla1, Julio Mora2, Paloma García Gallego3, Alina Agüero3, Kevin Golovin1.
Abstract
Ice accretion can adversely impact many engineering structures in commercial and residential sectors. Although there are many reports of low-ice-adhesion-strength materials, a scalable and durable deicing solution remains elusive, as ice detachment is dominated by interfacial toughness for large interfaces. In this work, durable metallic coatings based on Al-rich quasicrystalline alloys were prepared and applied on aluminum substrates using high-velocity oxyfuel thermal spray. X-ray diffraction patterns confirmed the quasicrystalline phases of the coating, and its large-scale deicing capability was studied by evaluating the coating's ice detachment mechanics using long lengths of ice. A toughness-controlled regime of interfacial fracture was observed for ice lengths longer than ∼2 cm, and a low shear strength of ∼30 kPa was achieved for a 20 cm ice length. The metallic coatings exhibited excellent ice repellency even after being abraded, scratched, heated, UV-irradiated, and exposed to chemical contaminations, demonstrating promising durability for real-world, large-scale ice removal.Entities:
Keywords: deicing; high-velocity oxyfuel thermal spray; ice-phobic; interfacial toughness; quasicrystals
Year: 2021 PMID: 34288651 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c08740
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229